5GNOW: Challenging the LTE Design Paradigms of Orthogonality and Synchronicity
Gerhard Wunder, Martin Kasparick, Stephan ten Brink, Frank Schaich,, Thorsten Wild, Ivan Gaspar, Eckhard Ohlmer, Stefan Krone, Nicola Michailow,, Ainoa Navarro, Gerhard Fettweis, Dimitri Ktenas, Vincent Berg, Marcin, Dryjanski, Slawomir Pietrzyk, Bertalan Eged

TL;DR
The 5GNOW project aims to challenge LTE's traditional design principles of strict orthogonality and synchronism, proposing new PHY and MAC concepts to better support heterogeneous, machine-type, and fragmented spectrum communications for future 5G networks.
Contribution
It introduces novel PHY and MAC layer concepts that relax LTE's strict synchronization and orthogonality, addressing emerging needs of 5G scenarios.
Findings
Proposes new transmission schemes suited for heterogeneous networks.
Enhances support for machine-type communications in future networks.
Contributes to 5G standardization efforts.
Abstract
LTE and LTE-Advanced have been optimized to deliver high bandwidth pipes to wireless users. The transport mechanisms have been tailored to maximize single cell performance by enforcing strict synchronism and orthogonality within a single cell and within a single contiguous frequency band. Various emerging trends reveal major shortcomings of those design criteria: 1) The fraction of machine-type-communications (MTC) is growing fast. Transmissions of this kind are suffering from the bulky procedures necessary to ensure strict synchronism. 2) Collaborative schemes have been introduced to boost capacity and coverage (CoMP), and wireless networks are becoming more and more heterogeneous following the non-uniform distribution of users. Tremendous efforts must be spent to collect the gains and to manage such systems under the premise of strict synchronism and orthogonality. 3) The advent of…
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